I wrote a paper on the drake equation when I took an astronomy class, and my conclusion was that while the universe is most likely filled with extraterrestrial life, Chalky is easily the dumbest lifeform in existence.

Wow, you're doing comedy now? Shiiiit you're real good at it

Maybe stick to angst and sucking the dick of Richard Dawkins dude, that's more your scene

Also, chill out, folks. This isn't him doing science. He's already done his work and has retired his Cambridge professorship. Now he's just kicking back the only way you can when you're a math wiz without the use of your legs.

On the whole I'd say he's less terrible than people who manage their scientific work according to the likelihood of getting a publishing deal. The reason the word "quantum" almost always denotes something that is ridiculous pseudoscience these days is for this reason. If it doesn't contain mathematics, it's rubbish and you shouldn't care about it.

Also, chill out, folks. This isn't him doing science. He's already done his work and has retired his Cambridge professorship. Now he's just kicking back the only way you can when you're a math wiz without the use of your legs.

On the whole I'd say he's less terrible than people who manage their scientific work according to the likelihood of getting a publishing deal. The reason the word "quantum" almost always denotes something that is ridiculous pseudoscience these days is for this reason. If it doesn't contain mathematics, it's rubbish and you shouldn't care about it.

Are you referring to things that mention "quantum" with that last statement or writings in general?

In Penrose's "Road to Reality" there's an anecdote about a physics PhD who went off to India after submitting his thesis, hung out with a bunch of "gurus", only to come home with a treatise on 40 (or more) points where quantum mechanics and Vedic scripture overlapped.

In Penrose's "Road to Reality" there's an anecdote about a physics PhD who went off to India after submitting his thesis, hung out with a bunch of "gurus", only to come home with a treatise on 40 (or more) points where quantum mechanics and Vedic scripture overlapped.